Noteworthy, the aircraft sports a quite weird two-tone grey camo, much different from the desert color scheme used by the Iraqi planes prior to the 2003 invasion which destroyed what remained of the Al Quwwa al Jawwiya al Iraqiya, and the light grey paint that was used on the Hellfire-equipped Cessna 208Bs or the Mil Mi-25 gunships.

The F-16 sale to Iraq is a huge mistake. They are more likely to be used on their Kurdish brothers to the north than against any other air force. And expect most of them to end up in Iran, Iraq’s puppet master.

Matthew Morgan

The whole point of giving them F-16’s was so that they could fight militants with them, not declare ware on another country.

Marco

The whole point of selling them overpriced and for-them-not-so-required US made weapons is called “US won, Iraq lost”.

phuzz

I think the idea is they might be used to fight Iran, in the same way Iran was sold F14’s, F4’s etc to use against Iraq in the 1970’s.

hoIoh

The commander of the Iraqi Air Force, sLt Gen Anwar, is Kurdish. So, no, you don’t know what you are talking about.

Mike M

Remember that plane, one day it will be on its way to dogfight a US fighter jet.

Ara Rezaee

Looks hot!

jagigen

Co-op with Usama went very well in the first years as well. It was a few years later it began to go south.

Tom Cooper

The camouflage is unusual – for F-16s. Otherwise, except for Su-25s, the IrAF has never used ‘desert camouflage patterns’ on its aircraft (some helicopters of the former Iraqi Army Aviation Corps – and latest Mi-35s for what is now usually shortened to ‘IQAF’ – are a different story).

What is actually unusual are national markings applied on that F-16: entirely new roundels (instead of traditional triangles?), and what looks like a pan-Arabic tricolore but with 2 instead of 3 green stars?

Obc

When were the national markings changed?

cencio4

Hi Tom, I was actually referring to the Mig-21s, Su-22s and IIRC the Mig-23s that both used desert camo schemes, didn’t they?

Thanks.

Obc

The colour scheme looks like it was based on that of the Mitsubishi F-2.

hoIoh

There is no roundel on that plane. The circular thing is the Iraqi Air Force (shortened to IqAF now) patch. See photo below.

There’s also nothing unusual about the “pan-arabic tricolor” on the tail. That’s the national flag of Iraq. There are no stars, just “Allah Ackbar” written across the white stripe in green.

So, nothing unusual about either of those.

ondgo247

Good! It’s easier to see for when we have to go back and shoot it down.

iRebbe

I freaking don’t understand how US can sell this fighter jets and weapons to Iraq. Because as soon as these weapons touch Iraq they will be copied by Iran and even worse selling it own version of the F-16

hoIoh

You really think Iran is interested in copying 40 year old technology?

iRebbe

For Iran that f-16 is a new technology which they don’t have and they have complete control over the Iraqi military

hoIoh

Please. I have worked with the Iraqi Air Force for the past 5 years. Please stop making statements about things of which you know nothing.

Democracy for all

The F16 delivered to any Air Force, will never have the same capacity as the USAF F16, this what we should know all of us, and not only the f16, the rafale, sukoi, mig, mirage etc,

Tom Cooper

@Cencio, camo patterns of Iraqi MiG-21bis’ and MiG-23BN/MS/MF/MLs were ‘standard camouflage patterns for export’, usually consisting of different shades of beige and olive green, plus red-brown (on MiG-23s). Later marks of Su-22s (such like Su-22M-4K for example) were even painted in chocolate brown and olive green, and thus very dark in appearance. Overall, anything but ‘desert camouflage’.

@holoh, thanks for explaining that. The pan-Arabic tricolore was introduced following the coups of 1963 (prior to that Iraq first used a flag in black, green, white and red, then only in black, white and green). Originally it included three green stars, like Syrian flag introduced around the same time, and unlike Egyptian with two stars, and Yemeni with one star. The ‘Takbir’ title (‘Allah-u-Akbar’) was introduced in January 1991. Lately, the three stars were removed and only the Takbir title left in their place, but the photos posted by Cencio were simply not clear enough for my tired eyes, and that’s why I asked. Still, I find it at least ‘unusual’ that the IQAF crest is applied on wings – instead of national insignia.

@all those ‘complaining’ about the sale of F-16s to Iraq… This sale was planned already as of 2002-2003, and is not more or less controversial than the sale of F-16s to Pakistan, for example (a nuclear power the intelligence and military apparatus of which have created the Taliban or trained characters that went to establish terrorist groups like Abu Sayyaf on the Philippines, and which is closely cooperating with China), F-15s to Saudi Arabia (which financed the creation of the Taliban etc.), or F-35s to Israel (a nuclear power that’s pretending to be a US ally while espionaging on it and purposedly playing a ‘mad dog’ whenever it can).

True, the present Iraqi government was ‘crafted’ by the CO IRGC-QF, Maj Gen Suleimani, but that doesn’t mean the Iranians can get their hands on these F-16s.

And even if: given the chaotic state of Iranian aircraft industries (where everybody is doing whatever he likes, just nothing that’s really useful for their air force[s]), I have strong doubts they could make any practical use of resulting intelligence.

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